Literature DB >> 19249208

Regulation of APC/C activity in oocytes by a Bub1-dependent spindle assembly checkpoint.

Barry E McGuinness1, Martin Anger, Anna Kouznetsova, Ana M Gil-Bernabé, Wolfgang Helmhart, Nobuaki R Kudo, Annelie Wuensche, Stephen Taylor, Christer Hoog, Bela Novak, Kim Nasmyth.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Missegregation of chromosomes during meiosis in human females causes aneuploidy, including trisomy 21, and is thought also to be the major cause of age-related infertility. Most errors are thought to occur at the first meiotic division. The high frequency of errors raises questions as to whether the surveillance mechanism known as the spindle assembly checkpoint (SAC) that controls the anaphase-promoting complex or cyclosome (APC/C) operates effectively in oocytes. Experimental approaches hitherto used to inactivate the SAC in oocytes suffer from a number of drawbacks.
RESULTS: Bub1 protein was depleted specifically in oocytes with a Zp3-Cre transgene to delete exons 7 and 8 from a floxed BUB1(F) allele. Loss of Bub1 greatly accelerates resolution of chiasmata and extrusion of polar bodies. It also causes defective biorientation of bivalents, massive chromosome missegregation at meiosis I, and precocious loss of cohesion between sister centromeres. By using a quantitative assay for APC/C-mediated securin destruction, we show that the APC/C is activated in an exponential fashion, with activity peaking 12-13 hr after GVBD, and that this process is advanced by 5 hr in oocytes lacking Bub1. Importantly, premature chiasmata resolution does not occur in Bub1-deficient oocytes also lacking either the APC/C's Apc2 subunit or separase. Finally, we show that Bub1's kinase domain is not required to delay APC/C activation.
CONCLUSIONS: We conclude that far from being absent or ineffective, the SAC largely determines the timing of APC/C and hence separase activation in oocytes, delaying it for about 5 hr.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19249208     DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2009.01.064

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Curr Biol        ISSN: 0960-9822            Impact factor:   10.834


  86 in total

1.  Spindle assembly checkpoint signalling is uncoupled from chromosomal position in mouse oocytes.

Authors:  Liming Gui; Hayden Homer
Journal:  Development       Date:  2012-04-18       Impact factor: 6.868

Review 2.  Meiotic origins of maternal age-related aneuploidy.

Authors:  Teresa Chiang; Richard M Schultz; Michael A Lampson
Journal:  Biol Reprod       Date:  2012-01-10       Impact factor: 4.285

Review 3.  The emerging role of APC/CCdh1 in development.

Authors:  Dong Hu; Xinxian Qiao; George Wu; Yong Wan
Journal:  Semin Cell Dev Biol       Date:  2011-04-07       Impact factor: 7.727

4.  Rec8-containing cohesin maintains bivalents without turnover during the growing phase of mouse oocytes.

Authors:  Kikuë Tachibana-Konwalski; Jonathan Godwin; Louise van der Weyden; Lysie Champion; Nobuaki R Kudo; David J Adams; Kim Nasmyth
Journal:  Genes Dev       Date:  2010-10-22       Impact factor: 11.361

5.  Error-prone mammalian female meiosis from silencing the spindle assembly checkpoint without normal interkinetochore tension.

Authors:  Agnieszka Kolano; Stéphane Brunet; Alain D Silk; Don W Cleveland; Marie-Hélène Verlhac
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2012-05-02       Impact factor: 11.205

6.  Mouse oocyte, a paradigm of cancer cell.

Authors:  Marie-Emilie Terret; Agathe Chaigne; Marie-Hélène Verlhac
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2013-09-30       Impact factor: 4.534

Review 7.  Bub1 and BubR1: at the interface between chromosome attachment and the spindle checkpoint.

Authors:  Sabine Elowe
Journal:  Mol Cell Biol       Date:  2011-05-31       Impact factor: 4.272

8.  Reduced ability to recover from spindle disruption and loss of kinetochore spindle assembly checkpoint proteins in oocytes from aged mice.

Authors:  Yan Yun; Janet E Holt; Simon I R Lane; Eileen A McLaughlin; Julie A Merriman; Keith T Jones
Journal:  Cell Cycle       Date:  2014-04-23       Impact factor: 4.534

9.  Depletion of pericentrin in mouse oocytes disrupts microtubule organizing center function and meiotic spindle organization.

Authors:  Wei Ma; Maria M Viveiros
Journal:  Mol Reprod Dev       Date:  2014-09-29       Impact factor: 2.609

10.  The spindle assembly checkpoint: More than just keeping track of the spindle.

Authors:  Katherine S Lawrence; JoAnne Engebrecht
Journal:  Trends Cell Mol Biol       Date:  2015
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